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3/19/14

My Month of Crime Fiction: The Friends of Eddie Coyle by George V. Higgins

The Friends of Eddie Coyle (1970)
by George V. Higgins

If the guys in this novel are Eddie Coyle's "friends," I
don't want to know what his enemies are like.

In this terse, stark novel, Higgins reveals a tightly-interconnected
world of gang members, gun runners, hitmen, and thieves. While Eddie,
Scalisi, and Dillon are all using one another to set up jobs, they're
simultaneously informing on one another to the cops. Eddie, though,
has the most to gain by talking- if he can convince the DA that he's
been helpful in capturing other criminals, he can get a light
sentence for his own crimes. Ultimately, though, Eddie has much worse
coming to him.

Now
I don't know if Higgins's novels inspired Quentin Tarantino's films,
but it sure seems like it. For instance, near the end of the book,
two of the characters discuss how to make a great grilled cheese
sandwich for two pages. Two
pages.
I mean, this whole book, a million kinds of guns are changing hands
and people are getting shot and banks robbed and these two cops are
sitting discussing grilled cheese sandwiches. Now if that isn't
classic Tarantino I don't know what is.

And
despite all the police work and the complicated set of relationships
among the gun runners and the gun buyers, everything is ultimately
brought down by one woman. After all, when your boyfriend bad-mouths
you to his friends and then refuses to apologize for it, why wouldn't
you rat him out to the cops and tell them he's behind the rash of
bank robberies? Bet Scalisi never saw that coming.

Anyway,
The Friends of
Eddie Coyle
is a quick, entertaining read, especially if you're a fan of The
Sopranos.
Except here it's Irish guys, mostly. And Boston, and the 1960s.